GB2277391A - Batch counter - Google Patents

Batch counter Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2277391A
GB2277391A GB9405906A GB9405906A GB2277391A GB 2277391 A GB2277391 A GB 2277391A GB 9405906 A GB9405906 A GB 9405906A GB 9405906 A GB9405906 A GB 9405906A GB 2277391 A GB2277391 A GB 2277391A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
counter
counter according
guide channel
hopper
items
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB9405906A
Other versions
GB9405906D0 (en
GB2277391B (en
Inventor
John Kirby
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Kirby Devon Ltd
Original Assignee
Kirby Devon Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Kirby Devon Ltd filed Critical Kirby Devon Ltd
Publication of GB9405906D0 publication Critical patent/GB9405906D0/en
Publication of GB2277391A publication Critical patent/GB2277391A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2277391B publication Critical patent/GB2277391B/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06MCOUNTING MECHANISMS; COUNTING OF OBJECTS NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G06M7/00Counting of objects carried by a conveyor
    • G06M7/02Counting of objects carried by a conveyor wherein objects ahead of the sensing element are separated to produce a distinct gap between successive objects
    • G06M7/04Counting of piece goods, e.g. of boxes
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65BMACHINES, APPARATUS OR DEVICES FOR, OR METHODS OF, PACKAGING ARTICLES OR MATERIALS; UNPACKING
    • B65B5/00Packaging individual articles in containers or receptacles, e.g. bags, sacks, boxes, cartons, cans, jars
    • B65B5/10Filling containers or receptacles progressively or in stages by introducing successive articles, or layers of articles
    • B65B5/101Filling containers or receptacles progressively or in stages by introducing successive articles, or layers of articles by gravity
    • B65B5/103Filling containers or receptacles progressively or in stages by introducing successive articles, or layers of articles by gravity for packaging pills or tablets
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B65CONVEYING; PACKING; STORING; HANDLING THIN OR FILAMENTARY MATERIAL
    • B65BMACHINES, APPARATUS OR DEVICES FOR, OR METHODS OF, PACKAGING ARTICLES OR MATERIALS; UNPACKING
    • B65B65/00Details peculiar to packaging machines and not otherwise provided for; Arrangements of such details
    • B65B65/08Devices for counting or registering the number of articles handled, or the number of packages produced by the machine

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Basic Packing Technique (AREA)

Abstract

A batch counter for tablets or tablet-like items has a hopper 11 with a wide bottom opening 12, a counter 13 to count the individual items from the hopper 11, and a channel 14 to channel the items from the hopper 11 to the counter 13 so as to pass in single file and spaced apart at the counter 13. The channel 14 is a lightweight, vibratory, V-section guide channel resiliently suspended, downwardly inclined towards the counter 13, and adjusted at critical inclination for the flow of items. <IMAGE>

Description

BATCH COUNTER This invention relates to a batch counter such as may be used for counting pharmaceutical tablets and tablet-like items such as nuts and bolts, or electronic devices such as transistors and capacitors or indeed any item that can be arranged to run from a hopper supply discretely down a slope.
Particularly for pharmaceutical tablets, there is a requirement for batching into bottles, say, of fifty or a hundred tablets automatically and without the need for tiresome manual counting. Batch counter machines are available but have numerous drawbacks, mainly involving price and complexity.
One problem lies in the proper regulation of the outflow of items from a hopper. The bottom opening of the hopper must be of a certain size, in relation to the size of the items being counted, such that arcing or bridging of items over the bottom opening does not occur. This, however, leads to a fast outflow, which results in difficulties in the counting device resolving individual items, leading to miscounts.
A batch counter, particularly for pharmaceutical tablets, needs to be versatile, to count tablets of different sizes, weights and surface finishes, and so the optimum bottom opening aperture cannot be provided for each kind or size of tablet. An adjustable bottom opening could be provided - an iris-type shutter say but there would then be the problem of optimally adjusting the aperture. Bridging or arcing is a phenomenon that can happen but once in a while, though when it happens it is of course very troublesome. The setting of a bottom opening aperture cannot be easily done on a trial and error basis if the error - the tendency to arcing or bridging - may not manifest itself until after several hours of operation.
The complexity of conventional tablet counters often, too, makes them difficult to clean and particularly to sterilize - more particularly to sterilize under such conditions as are now demanded by licensing authorities to ensure destruction, for example, of HIV.
The present invention provides a batch counter that addresses these problems.
The invention comprises a batch counter for tablets and tablet-like items comprising a hopper with a wide bottom opening for a supply of the items to be counted, a counter device adapted to count the passage of individual items from the hopper, and channel means adapted to channel the items from the hopper to the counter device so as to pass in single file and spaced apart at the counter, the channel means comprising a lightweight, vibratory, V-section guide channel resiliently suspended, downwardly inclined towards the counter device, beneath said bottom opening and adjusted at critical inclination for the flow of items.
The inclination of the guide channel may be adjustable. The inclination of the guide channel may be dependent on the disposition of the hopper and the batch counter may then comprise hopper adjustment means adjusting the disposition of the hopper and the inclination of the guide channel.
The batch counter may comprise a damming arrangement associated with the guide channel, which may comprise a damming plate swingably suspended above the channel guide - the damming plate may be suspended from the hopper, and may be adjustable or selectable for weight. The damming plate may have an inverted V-notch aligned with the point of the V-section guide channel.
The guide channel may be suspended by elastic suspenders from the hopper. The hopper and the guide channel may have hooks and the guide channel may then be suspended by its hooks by elastic loops from the hooks of the hopper.
The guide channel may be attached to a vibrator, which may comprise an electromagnet which may be energised with an intermittent current or with a chopped alternating current, and the vibration amplitude may be variable by adjusting the chopping of the alternating current.
The guide channel may deliver the items into a second inclined guide channel, which may comprise a tube and which may be more steeply inclined than the V-section guide channel.
The counter may comprise a flap directing items to receptacles and flap positioning means repositioning the flap after a predetermined item count. The flap may direct items into one or the other leg of a bifurcated conduit, which may have bottom openings above a ledge for receptacles for the items.
The counter device may comprise a photoelectric device.
The channel means may be made readily removable for sterilisation.
One embodiment of a batch counter according to the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which : Figure 1 is a side elevation of the counter; Figure 2 is a part cut-away front elevation of the counter of Figure 1; Figure 3 is a front elevation to a larger scale of a part omitted from Figure 2; and Figure 4 is a plan view on Arrow 4 of Figure 1 to a larger scale.
The drawings illustrate a batch counter for tablets and tablet like items comprising a hopper 11 with a wide bottom opening 12 for a supply of the items to be counted.
A tablet counter as may be used industrially will be larger than one that may be used in a dispensary, but both will work on the same principle and be generally similar. A dispensary batch counter may be required to count, say, fifty tablets at a time into bottles and its hopper adapted to hold from one to several thousand tablets.
The bottom opening 12 is wide enough to avoid arcing or bridging which can happen when the opening dimension is around three times or less the diameter of the tablets - this depends however on the density and the surface texture of the tablets. Generally speaking, for use with the widest possible variety of tablets, the bottom opening 12 will be dimensioned having regard to the largest tablets likely to be encountered, and a square opening of size 100 mm is a preferred size. This will apply equally well to larger, industrial counters, of course.
That dimension of opening, of course, means that if no restriction were imposed, the tablets would simply flood out of the hopper 11; the measures to be described below regulate the outflow so that it is countable.
The counter comprises a counter device 13 in the form of a lamp 13a and photocell 13b arrangement, the photocell 13b registering the passage of individual tablets. Clearly, miscounting would arise if the tablets passed the photocell 13b in aggregations of two or more with no intervening space, and it is desirable therefore to ensure as far as possible that the tablets are spaced apart by the time they reach the counter device 13. - This is achieved by channel means 14 adapted to channel the tablets from the hopper 11 to the device 13 so as to pass in single file and spaced apart at the counter. The channel means 14 comprise a lightweight, vibrator, V-section guide channel resiliently suspended, downwardly inclined towards the counter device 13, beneath said bottom opening 12 and adjusted at critical inclination for the flow of tablets.
By critical inclination is meant the inclination at which a tablet just fails to slide down the channel 14 under gravity. It is clearly different for different tablets. A dedicated tablet counter in an industrial operation can of course be constructed so that the channel 14 is at the critical inclination appropriate to the tablet for which the counter is to be used.
Generally speaking, however, it will be desired to provide adjustment for the channel 14 inclination to accommodate a variety of tablets. The correct adjustment is easily determined by placing a tablet on the shallowly inclined channel and tipping the channel until the tablet begins to slide, then backing off slightly and checking that the tablet does not slide at the backed-off inclination.
Since the guide channel 14 is located directly beneath the hopper 11, it is convenient to suspend it from the hopper. As a result, its inclination will depend on the disposition of the hopper 11 and hopper adjustment means 15 are provided in the form of a wing nut clamp 16 on a lug 17 on the hopper 11 adjustable in a slot 18 of a strut 19 pivoted at 21 to the rear of the body 22 of the counter. The hopper 11 is mounted to the front of the body 22 by struts 23 pivoted on lugs 24 and clampable thereon by wing nuts 25. The strut 19 arrangement could of course be replaced by a manually turned or motor driven lead screw arrangement.
It will be appreciated that the hopper 11 is not only readily adjusted for tilt of the channel 14 but also readily removable for cleaning and for sterilisation in an autoclave.
Clearly, the adjustment of the channel 14 to critical inclination does not guarantee that tablets dropping through the bottom aperture 12 and subject to the pressure of the "head" of tablets in the hopper 11 will not move en masse under gravity down the channel 14 and to provide further control, a damming arrangement 26 is associated with the guide channel 14. The damming arrangement 26 comprises a damming plate 27 swingingly suspended above the channel guide 14. The damming plate 27 is suspended from hooks 28 fixed to the hopper and is adjustable or selectable for weight - additional plates or weights can be hung from the hcok 28 to make the effective weight of the plate 27 greater, or different gauges of plate can be substituted.
The damming plate 27 is shaped to conform to the contour of the channel 14 but is provided with an inverted V-notch 27a aligned with the point of the V-section guide channel 14 - this forces tablets to flow essentially only down the middle of the channel 14 after being released by the damming plate 27.
The guide channel 14 is suspended by elastic suspenders 29 - suitably sized O-ring seals or other elastic loops are ideal - from hooks 31 fixed to the hopper 11. The channel 14 hangs on the suspenders 29 by its own hooks 32.
The guide channel 14 is attached to a vibrator 33 which comprises an electromagnet 34 supplied with an intermittent or oscillating current which is mounted in the body 22 of the counter and which acts on an armature 35 which in turn is attached to the middle of a springy strip 36 by a yoke 37. The strip 36 - which may be of springy metal or a stiff plastics or fibreglass material such as is used for printed circuit boards - is mounted by its ends in the body 22 and has a tie 38 extending from its middle section to a lug 39 on the channel 14.
Generally speaking, vibration will release a tablet, which is resting on the channel at critical inclination, to move down the incline under gravity and likewise vibration will controlledly release a dammed-up pile of tablets on the critically inclined channel 14 to flow one-by-one and in Indian file from beneath the V-notch 27a. Adjustment to the rate at which the tablets are thus released may be had by adjusting the amplitude of the vibration. The electromagnet 34 may be fed with chopped alternating current (e.g. chopped single-phase mains current) which can be varied by for example a conventional triac motor controller.
The guide channel 14 delivers the tablets into a second inclined guide channel 41 which in fact comprises a tube. The diameter of the tube will naturally be greater than the maximum diameter of tablets with which the counter is to be used. The tube 41 is more steeply inclined than the V-section guide channel 14. The tablets, already in Indian file and separated to at least some extent out of the V-secticn guide channel 14, will tend to increase their spatial separation because of the steeper inclination and the increased acceleration resulting therefrom.
The photocell 13b emits a signal pulse with the passage of each tablet and this is input to an up- or down-counter device that is pre-set with the required batch count and which, on attainment of said preset count, emits a control pulse to a solenoid arrangement 42 which flips a diverter plate or flap 43 so as to transfer the filling operation from one bottle 51 to a second bottle 52. The solenoid arrangement 42 comprises a solenoid 44 disposed either side of the flap 43, which is mounted on a horizontal spindle 45 having a flat end 45a keying into a slot in a rocker 46 pivoted by a rod 47 which is pulled between the solenoids 44 - the flap 43 is stable in its end positions, so pulsing the solenoids 43 will suffice - they do not need to be permanently energised, which saves power and reduces the cooling requirement.
The diverter plate or flap 43 directs the tablets into one or other leg 53,54 of a bifurcated conduit 55 which has bottom openings 56 above a ledge 57 for the bottles 51,52.
The conduit 55 and the inclined tube 41 comprise a unit which can be removed for cleaning and sterilising by unscrewing nuts 61 from end-threaded spigots 62. The flap 43 can then also be removed simply by pulling it out of its bearing 63 - a nylon or like bush.
The counter can be designed with appropriate modification to be suitable for counting or batching small items other than pharmaceutical tablets and may indeed be adapted for batching engineering items such as washers, nuts and screws, or for electronic components such as transistors and capacitors, food items such as sweets and indeed anything which can be made to flow as discrete, countable objects.
Whilst the counter described and illustrated is manually set up to best adjustment for satisfactory operation with the particular tablets or other items being counted, it is possible to introduce an automatic control arrangement with for example a memory for the required settings for different items and/or a feed back arrangement that adjusts the tilt of the guide channel and/or the amplitude of the vibration applied to it and/or the damming effect of the damming arrangement, which latter arrangement may include loading other than gravitational, for example by an adjustable magnet or electromagnet or by a motorised spring loading arrangement. A sensing arrangement may detect the rate of counting and the control arrangement make adjustments to one or other of the operating variables to seek to maximise the rate of counting. As more than one variable is involved, the control arrangement may with advantage include a neural network.
And for - continuous unattented operations, a conveyor may carry empty bottles past the arrangement under the control of the control arrangement.

Claims (22)

1. A batch counter for tablets and tablet-like items comprising a hopper with a wide bottom opening for a supply of the items to be counted, a counter device adapted to count the passage of individual items from the hopper, and channel means adapted to channel the items from the hopper to the counter device so as to pass in single file and spaced apart at the counter, the channel means comprising a lightweight, vibratory, V-section guide channel resiliently suspended, downwardly inclined towards the counter device, beneath said bottom opening and adjusted at critical inclination for the flow of items.
2. A counter according to claim 1, the inclination of the guide channel being adjustable.
3. A counter according to claim 2, the inclination of the guide channel depending on the disposition of the hopper, and hopper adjustment means adjusting its disposition and the inclination of the guide channel.
4. A counter according to any one of claims 1 to 3, comprising a damming arrangement associated with the guide channel.
5. A counter according to claim 4, in which the damming arrangement comprises a damming plate swingably suspended above the channel guide.
6. A counter according to claim 5, in which the damming plate is suspended from the hopper.
7. A counter according to claim 5 or claim 6, in which the damming plate is adjustable or selectable for weight.
8. A counter according to any one of claims 5 to 7, in which the damming plate has an inverted V-notch aligned with the point of the V-section guide channel.
9. A counter according to any one of claims 1 to 8, in which the guide channel is suspended by elastic suspenders from the hopper.
10. A counter according to claim 9, the hopper and guide channel having hooks and the guide channel being suspended by its hooks by elastic loops from the hooks of the hopper.
11. A counter according to any one of claims 1 to 10, in which the--guide channel is attached to a vibrator.
12. A counter according to claim 11, in which the vibrator comprises an electromagnet.
13. A counter according to claim 12, in which the electromagnet is energised with a chopped alternating current.
14. A counter according to claim 13, in which the vibration amplitude is variable by adjusting the chopping of the alternating current.
15. A counter according to any one of claims 1 to 14, in which the guide channel delivers the items into a second inclined guide channel.
16. A counter according to claim 15, in which the second inclined guide channel comprises a tube.
17. A counter according to claim 15 or claim 16, in which the second inclined guide channel is more steeply inclined than the V-section guide channel.
18. A counter according to any one of claims 1 to 17, comprising a flap directing items to receptacles and flap positioning means repositioning the flap after a predetermined item count.
19. A counter according to claim 18, said flap directing items into one or the other leg of a bifurcated conduit.
20. A counter according to claim 19, said bifurcated conduit having bottom openings above a ledge for receptacles for the items.
21. A counter according to any one of claims 1 to 20, in which the counter device comprises a photoelectric device.
22. A counter according to any one of claims 1 to 21, in which the channel means are readily detachable for sterilisation.
GB9405906A 1993-04-23 1994-03-24 Batch counter Expired - Fee Related GB2277391B (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB939308506A GB9308506D0 (en) 1993-04-23 1993-04-23 Batch counter

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB9405906D0 GB9405906D0 (en) 1994-05-11
GB2277391A true GB2277391A (en) 1994-10-26
GB2277391B GB2277391B (en) 1997-01-22

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GB939308506A Pending GB9308506D0 (en) 1993-04-23 1993-04-23 Batch counter
GB9405906A Expired - Fee Related GB2277391B (en) 1993-04-23 1994-03-24 Batch counter

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GB939308506A Pending GB9308506D0 (en) 1993-04-23 1993-04-23 Batch counter

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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2293903A (en) * 1994-10-06 1996-04-10 Kirby Devon Limited Batch counter
US6799684B2 (en) * 2002-10-15 2004-10-05 Batching Systems, Inc. Multi-head portioning system
EP1678035A1 (en) * 2003-09-24 2006-07-12 Gainco, Inc. Process for counting and filling containers
EP2168875A1 (en) * 2008-09-30 2010-03-31 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Tablet supply apparatus
CN108423203A (en) * 2018-03-09 2018-08-21 浙江工贸职业技术学院 Quantitative drug dispensing mechanism

Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1121032A (en) * 1965-08-10 1968-07-24 Erdos Davis Holdings Ltd Improvements in or relating to counting apparatus
US3782590A (en) * 1972-05-18 1974-01-01 G Apfel Pill counting machine
EP0257773A2 (en) * 1986-08-26 1988-03-02 H.G. Kalish Inc. Device for counting and loading small items into containers

Patent Citations (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB1121032A (en) * 1965-08-10 1968-07-24 Erdos Davis Holdings Ltd Improvements in or relating to counting apparatus
US3782590A (en) * 1972-05-18 1974-01-01 G Apfel Pill counting machine
EP0257773A2 (en) * 1986-08-26 1988-03-02 H.G. Kalish Inc. Device for counting and loading small items into containers

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2293903A (en) * 1994-10-06 1996-04-10 Kirby Devon Limited Batch counter
GB2293903B (en) * 1994-10-06 1997-12-03 Kirby Devon Limited Batch counter
US6799684B2 (en) * 2002-10-15 2004-10-05 Batching Systems, Inc. Multi-head portioning system
EP1678035A1 (en) * 2003-09-24 2006-07-12 Gainco, Inc. Process for counting and filling containers
EP1678035A4 (en) * 2003-09-24 2009-09-23 Gainco Inc Process for counting and filling containers
EP2168875A1 (en) * 2008-09-30 2010-03-31 Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd. Tablet supply apparatus
US8769915B2 (en) 2008-09-30 2014-07-08 Panasonic Healthcare Co., Ltd. Tablet supply apparatus
CN108423203A (en) * 2018-03-09 2018-08-21 浙江工贸职业技术学院 Quantitative drug dispensing mechanism

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB9405906D0 (en) 1994-05-11
GB2277391B (en) 1997-01-22
GB9308506D0 (en) 1993-06-09

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PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 20000324